Wikipedia

Deborah Hopkinson

Deborah Hopkinson is an American writer of children's books, primarily historical fiction, nonfiction and picture books. She was born in Lowell, Massachusetts.[1]

Selected books

  • Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt (1993)
  • Maria's Comet (1999)
  • Pioneer Summer (2002)
  • Girl Wonder: A Baseball Story in Nine Innings (2003)
  • Shutting Out the Sky (2003)
  • Apples to Oregon (2004)
  • Sky Boys (2005)
  • Into the Firestorm (2006)
  • Abe Lincoln Crosses a Creek (2008)
  • Keep On! The Story of Matthew Henson, Co-Discoverer of the North Pole (2009)
  • Titanic: Voices from the Disaster (2012)
  • The Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and a Boy Called Eel (2013)
  • Steamboat School (2016)
  • A Letter to my Teacher (2017)

Awards

  • Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt won the International Reading Association Award.[2]
  • Sky Boys, about the builders of the Empire State Building, was a Boston Globe–Horn Book Award Honor book.[3]
  • Keep On!, about Matthew Henson, won the Eloise Jarvis McGraw Award for Children's Literature for 2009/2010.
  • Titanic: Voices from the Disaster was a Robert F. Sibert Honor book and a YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction finalist.
  • The Great Trouble, a novel about Dr. John Snow and a cholera outbreak in Victorian London, was an Oregon Book Award finalist and winner of the Oregon Spirit Award.
  • Steamboat School, about John Berry Meachum and his students, received the 2017 Jane Addams Children's Book Award, given annually to a children's book that advances the causes of peace and social equality.[4]
  • Two of her books won a Jane Addams Book Honor Award in 2004: Girl Wonder: A Baseball Story in Nine Innings about Alta Weiss, for younger readers and Shutting Out the Sky, about immigrants in 1900s New York, for older readers.[4]
  • Shutting Out the Sky was also an NCTE Orbis Pictus Honor Book.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Bio". Deborah Hopkinson (deborahhopkinson.com). Archived from the original on 2008-05-07. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
  2. ^ "IRA Children's and Young Adult's Book Awards". International Reading Association. 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
  3. ^ "Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present". The Horn Book. 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-07-10. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
  4. ^ a b "Jane Addams Peace Association - Previous Winners of the Jane Addams Children's Book Awards Listed by Year". Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2009-09-27.
  5. ^ "Deborah Hopkinson". Greenwood Publishing Group. 1008. Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2008-07-14.

External links

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